Conflict of Laws Outline Professor Silberman Fall 2004


§ 2(a) if claim is substantively based



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§ 2(a) if claim is substantively based

  • (1) upon law of one other state, the limitation period of that state applies

  • NOTE: ULA is clear reversal of idea that SoLs are procedural

  • Interest Analysis

    • is there a policy motivating the SoL that can be directly tied to the cause of action

  • difficulties

    • because SoL can be characterized as either substantive, differences will arise between jurisdictions leading to forum shopping

    • also, unless a court clearly states whether its decision to dismiss due to SoL is premised on idea that SoL is substantive, it is possible to sue in another state claiming that the dismissal was on procedural grounds (i.e., without prejudice—res judicata does not bar new action)

  • constitutional issues

    • it is constitutional for court to apply not only its own shorter SoL, but also its own longer statute (at least when the other state’s interest is not substantive)

      • Sun Oil v. Wortman, 1988—422: a state does not violate the constitution by characterizing statute of limitations as procedural and applying its own longer statute

      • NOTE: might try to distinguish Sun Oil in case where the other state’s statute of limitations is clearly substantive

  • borrowing statutes


    II. Modern Approaches to Choice of Law

    A. Interest Analysis in Torts



    1. Cavers, Imaginary Cases—104

    • Case 1

      • facts:

        • is NY charity; π is NY domiciliary who was in Mass. on a trip organized by ∆; injury and conduct took place in Mass.; forum is NY

        • Mass.: charitable immunity

        • NY: no charitable immunity

      • Griswold: Restatement First—place of injury

        • but if Mass immunity rule specifically limits application to Mass non-profits

        • justification

          • strong rule allows parties to assess rights clearly prior to litigation (i.e., frame settlement negotiations)

      • Rheinstein: parties’ expectations

        • ∆ should expect that its liability is governed by place of incorporation (at least where ∆’s office is also in that state, π is a domiciliary of the same state, and the relationship btw. π and ∆ in centered in that state)

      • Reese: Restatement Second—significant contacts

        • R.2d § 379(a)(1): in tort law, when place of injury and place of negligence are the same, this will almost always be the law that should be applied

        • see R.2d § 145 (126):

          • (1) with respect to torts, rule is most significant contacts

          • (2) contacts to be taken into account include:

            • (a) place of injury

            • (b) place of conduct

            • (c) domicile, residence, nationality, and/or place of incorporation of the parties

            • (d) where the relationship btw. the aprties is centered

          • question: how do we know which contacts are significant?

        • Prof. Reese suggests that charitable immunity is better determined by the law of place of incorporation of the charity (at least where it is the same as π’s domicile)

      • Currie—state policy/interests

        • Mass. charitable immunity law aims to protect Mass. charities

        • NY law aims to allow its citizens to recover for tort at least against NY charities

        • thus, this is the classic false conflict—the facts simply don’t implicate application of the Mass. rule

      • Cavers—interest analysis

        • shouldn’t choose btw. law of two or more states without regard to the content of their respective laws

        • largely agrees with Currie

    • Case 2

      • facts:

        • ∆ is NY charity; π is Mass. domiciliary with no relationship to ∆; injury and conduct took place in Mass.; forum is NY

        • Mass.: charitable immunity

        • NY: no charitable immunity

      • Griswold

        • place of injury

      • Reese

        • most significant contacts (injury and contact) are in Mass., so Mass. law applies

      • Rheinstein

        • expectations: ∆’s expectations are shaped by the law of its place of incorporation and primary place of business

      • Currie

        • seems reasonable to suppose that NY law intended to protect whomever might be injured by a NY charitable corporation

        • moreover, failure to apply law favoring recovery to both NY and Mass. citizens might violate the Privileges and Immunities Clause

        • thus, NY law should apply

      • Cavers

        • NY policy is to put charitable corporations on the same footing as other ∆s—this applies equally to the Mass. π

          • seems to be searching for an interest

        • Mass. policy is to protect Mass. corporation—this does not apply to NY ∆

          • moreover, Mass. generally favors recovery if there’s no reason to shield ∆ from liability

        • NY law should apply

    • Case 3

      • facts

        • ∆ is NY charity; π is NY domiciliary in Mass. with ∆; injury and conduct occurred in Mass.; π was injured when unregistered vehicle borrowed from a farmer and operated by ∆’s agent back into π, but there was no negligence; forum is NY

        • NY law: no charitable immunity, but π must prove negligence

        • Mass. law: charitable immunity, but driver of unregistered vehicle is strictly liable

      • Griswold

        • injury occurred in Mass., so both Mass. laws apply

        • immunity = no recovery

      • Reese

        • Mass. charitable immunity law should apply, but others don’t see it that way, so it doesn’t

        • Mass. strict liability rule should not be applied by NY court—imposition of strict liability is so outrageous an injustice as to offenc NY public policy

        • case should be dismissed without prejudice, allowing π to refile in Mass.

      • Rheinstein

        • Mass. strict liability rule is penal—NY should not apply Mass. penal law

        • thus, π does not recover

      • Currie

        • Mass. strict liability policy does not extend to charities b/c of charitable immunity rule—thus, Mass. law, as a whole, denies recovery

        • NY has no strict liability, so it too would deny recovery in this case

        • issue by issue analysis shouldn’t result in accumulation of negative policies leading to a result not contemplated by either state

        • since application of either law, as a whole, would deny recovery, recovery should be denied

      • Cavers

        • each rule of law should be analyzed separately (de passage); Currie’s insistence that two unrelated rules be seen to come from the same source is unjustified

        • Mass. strict liability law evinces an interest in regulating conduct on Mass. highway—thus, it should apply

        • NY has no interest in conduct on Mass. highways, so its law requiring negligence should not apply

        • Mass. charitable immunity law does not extend to NY charity

        • NY’s law intends to hold charities liable

        • thus, NY law should be applied re. charitable immunity and Mass. law should be applied re. strict liability—π recovers

    • Case 4

      • facts

        • truck crash in Mass; 2 πs: NY (in Mass. with ∆) and Mass. (no relationship to ∆), both are killed; ∆ is NY charity

        • Mass. law: limits recovery to $20,000

        • NY law: no damage limit

      • Griswold

        • place of injury—π does not recover

        • distinguishes Kilberg because place on injury in airline crash is fortuitous; not so in automobile accident

      • Reese

        • NY has strong public policy against applying damage limitations (Kilberg)—thus, NY π’s recovery should not be limited

        • NY, however, has no interest in extending this policy to Mass. π—thus, Mass. π’s recovery is limited

      • Rheinstein

        • Mass. damage limit applies to Mass. π—never had expectation that law other than Mass. would determine amount he could recover

        • NY law should apply to NY π—close relationship to ∆ means that he expected that NY law would determine any dispute with ∆

      • Currie

        • principle of equality requires that if NY forum does not recognize Mass. damage limit with respect to NY π (as it does not—see Kilberg), it must not recognize damage limit with respect to Mass. π

        • if NY legislature meant its policy favoring unlimited recovery to apply only to NY domiciliaries, it should have made that clear

      • Cavers

        • damage limit issue is a true conflict

          • Mass. damage limit does not apply to NY π, and NY has interest in unlimited damages for its domiciliary (when relationship to ∆ was based in NY) no matter where the accident occurred

          • Mass. π was no claim to unlimited damages provided by NY

        • although he sympathizes with Currie, he sees no difference btw. Mass. π in this case and Mass. π where there is no NY π—both are in the same position, so both should be treated the same

        • case would be much closer if Mass. π had relationship with NY charity or NY π was in Mass. and had no relationship to NY charity

    • Case 5

      • facts

        • ∆ is Mass. charity; π is Mass. domiciliary who was in NY on a trip organized by ∆; injury and conduct took place in NY; forum is NY

        • Mass.: charitable immunity

        • NY: no charitable immunity

      • Griswold

        • place of injury—π recovers

      • Reese

        • most significant contacts (injury and conduct) are with NY; thus, NY law applies—π recovers

        • Prof. Reese disagrees—most significant conduct is relationship btw. π and ∆ (centered in Mass.)—thus, π does not recover

      • Rheinstein

        • charitable immunity is a special concern of state of incorporation; where π is also from that state, the parties expectations will have been shaped by that law

        • thus, π does not recover

      • Currie

        • true conflict

          • Mass. has interest in extending charitable immunity to Mass. charity

          • NY has interest in regulating conduct on its roads

        • in true conflict, forum should apply its own law—π recovers

      • Cavers

        • no conflict

          • NY has pervasive interest in providing and regulating highway system

          • Mass policy really only applies (or only strictly applies) to Mass charities while they are in Mass; when ∆ leaves the protective shell of Mass, Mass law no longer applies to it; if it ventures into a state with higher degree of π protection, it takes on that additional degree of risk

        • thus, NY law applies—π recovers

          • Mass. courts should realize this limitation on Mass. law and also apply NY law were forum in Mass.


    2. The New York Experience

    • Pearson v. Northeast Airlines, 2dCir 1962 (cert. denied)—135

      • held: de passage analysis (i.e., issue by issue interest analysis) is not unconstitutional

        • that is, if court decides to apply another state’s law to one or more issues, it need not apply that state’s law to all issues even though the issues are governed by the same statute (i.e., court can separate questions of liability, immunity, recovery, etc.)

        • basically, confirms the constitutionality of Kilberg

    • Neumeier Rules (attempt to distill series of NYCA cases re. host/guest statutes):

      • (1) when the guest-passenger and the host-driver are domiciled in the same state, and that car is registered there, the law of that state should determine the standard of care that the host owes to his guest;

        • Babcock v. Johnson, NY 1963—145

          • facts: NY couple and guest crash into wall while on weekend trip in Ontario; Ontario has host-guest statute preventing guest from brining suit; NY has no such statute

          • policy/interest analysis

            • NY policy: even guests ought to be compensated (protect guests; make sure they do not become burdens on the state)

              • NOTE: any possible deterrence policy (regulating roadways) is not furthered

            • possible Ontario policies: protect drivers; keep insurance rates down by protecting ins. cos. against fraudulent claims

              • in any case, it is only Ontario ∆s and their ins. carriers that Ontario has an interest in protecting

          • held: false conflict—NY law applies

        • Macey v. Rozbicki, NY 1966—162: basically same facts as Babcock, but π and ∆ were in Ontario for an extended time (at ∆’s vacation home) and the trip during which the accident occurred was to have begun and ended in Ontario

          • held: false conflict—NY law applies

            • NY law evinces an interest in protecting ∆

            • Ontario law has no interest either in protecting NY drivers from suit or in keeping NY ins. rates low

          • irrelevant that the trip on which the accident occurred was a short drive entirely within Ontario

        • Kell v. Henderson, NY 1966—160

          • facts: mirror image of Babcock—Ontario driver (who borrowed car with permission of owner—his mother) and guest crash into wall while on short trip in NY; Ontario has host-guest statute preventing guest from brining suit; NY has no such statute

          • held: NY has interest in establishing liability for conduct on its roadways; thus, NY law applies

        • Tooker v. Lopez, NY 1969—173: π and ∆ were NY residents; both were students at Mich. St. Univ.; both died in automobile accident in which ∆ was driving occurred in Mich.; a Mich. domiciliary was also in the car and died

          • held: NY law applies; false conflict

          • p. 174 (missing sentence; end of ¶ starting “The teleological…”): “The only justification for the distinction btw. injured guest which can withstand logical as well as constitutional statute which…” [must be raising burden on guest to prevent fraudulent claims]

            • ungrateful guest argument from Dym is rejected; therefore, Dym is overruled

        • Farber v. Smolack, NY 1967—165: π, driver, and ∆ are NY domiciliaries; vehicle registered in NY; π loaned car to driver, ∆ was passenger; accident occurred in NC

            • NC law: owner only liable for borrower’s negligence if use of vehicle was for owner’s benefit (loss-allocating rule)

            • NY law: owner is liable for negligence of anyone who uses vehicle with permission

          • held: NY law applies

        • Chila, SNDY—189

          • NY host (no h-g); NJ guest (no h-g); relationship formed and accident in Ohio (h-g stat.)

          • held: this is a rule 1 case b/c host and guest are both from states with no h-g stat. (thus, fact that they’re from different states doesn’t matter); moreover, Ohio has no greater interest (i.e. still has no interest) when relationship formed in Ohio

      • (2) when driver is from host/guest state and guest is not, place of accident controls (barring special circumstances that might allow driver to interpose host/guest defense even though accident occurred in victim’s host/guest state—these circumstances are note elaborated on)

      • (3) when driver and guest are from different states, normal rule is place of injury, but must analyze the substantive purpose of the laws to determine whether there is a true conflict

        • Neumeier v. Kuehner, NY 1972—181

          • facts: NY driver and car (no host/guest); Ont. passenger (host/guest); accident in Ont.

          • category: Rule 3

          • held: no conflict—Ontario law applies

            • NY law does not protect Ontario domiciliary

            • NY law does not attempt to regulate operation of motor vehicle in Ontario

            • Ontario has no interest in protecting NY driver or NY insurance company

            • but court now says that the case rests on Ontario’s “ungrateful guest” policy (a policy that was rejected in the earlier cases)

              • it seems this case is better classified as no interest—in which case, Neumeier Rules seem


    3. Other Interstate Automobile Cases

    • Labree, RI—193: reaches opposite conclusion on the same facts as Neumeier

      • facts

        • RI driver and car (no host-guest stat.)

        • Mass. passenger (host/guest)

        • accident in Mass.

        • NOTE: this would be a Neumeier Rule 3 case

      • held: RI law applies

        • Mass. has no interest in protecting driver

        • RI has no interest in providing compensation to guest, nor in regulating conduct on Mass. roadways

        • deciding factor: RI is the only state with an interest in protecting driver, and it chooses not to do so—thus, driver should not receive protection of some other law

          • basically, they seem to prefer a rule favoring π in no interest case (so they strain to find an interest in not applying host/guest); NY, on the other hand, seems to prefer a resort to territoriality in no interest case

    • Cippola v. Shaposka, Pa—190

      • true conflict—would be Neumeier Rule 2

      • facts: Pa guest (no host/gust stat.); Del host (host/gust stat.); H-G relationship centered in Del; accident in Del; forum is Pa

      • held: Pa law applies

        • court use interest analysis to determine that there is a true conflict (i.e., Pa has interest in Pa guest receiving compensation; Del has interest in protecting Del host)

        • but, Delaware’s contacts with the accident are more significant—seems to express a preference for territoriality

    • Foster v. Leggett, Ky 1972—192

      • facts: Ky guest (no host/guest); Ohio host (host/guest); accident in Ohio (although trip began and was to end in Ky);

      • held: Ky law applies

        • presumption in favor of forum law: “if there are significant contacts—not necessarily the most significant contacts—with Kentucky, the Knetucky law should be applied”

    • Milkovich v. Saari, Minn 1973—194

      • facts: π and ∆s (owner and driver) are Ontario domiciliaries; car registered and insured in Ontario; accident in Minnesota; π hospitalized in Minn.

      • held: Minn. law applies

        • court adopts Leflar’s Choice Influencing Factors as interpreted by NH courts; those factors being:

          • (a) predictability of results—easily dealt with

            • court finds this factor irrelevant when dealing with nonconsensual transaction (i.e. torts)

          • (b) maintenance of interstate and international order—easily dealt with

            • this, according to the court, simply means that forum should not apply a the law of any jurisdiction that does not have a “substantial connection with the total facts and the particular issue”

          • (c) simplification of the judicial task—easily dealt with

            • court thinks this isn’t really a factor because courts are fully competent to administer the law of another jurisdiction

          • (d) advancement of the forum’s governmental interest

            • there must be some sort of analysis to determine whether the forum has an interest to application of its law

          • (e) application of the better rule of law

            • here, the court expresses its displeasure with host/guest statutes; they’re anachronistic, etc.; the better law is no host/guest

        • upshot

          • the only important factor are (d) governmental interest; and (e) better law

          • when the forum has an interest in applying its own law, it’s hard to imagine the courts finding that another state’s law is better

          • its not clear, however, whether the forum would apply its own, “better” law in cases where it has no interest in doing so


    4. Help From the Professors?

    • Currie, Married Women’s Contracts: A Study in Conflict-of-Laws Method

      • in situations like that presented in Milliken v. Pratt, there are (being slightly arbitrary) four important factors:

        • domicile or nationality or residence or place of business of the creditor

        • domicile or nationality or residence of the married woman

        • place of the transaction (i.e. the place where the contract was made—or possibly where it was to be performed)

        • forum

      • considering that each of these factors may point either to domestic law or foreign law, there are 16 possible cases, 14 of which present choice of law questions (the other two are either entirely domestic or entirely foreign)

      • assume the following interests

        • domestic: protecting domestic married women; otherwise enforcing contracts

        • foreign: enforcing contracts

      • if the traditional rule (ie. place of contract) is applied, we see the following results

        • in six cases one of these interests is subverted with no benefit

        • in four cases one jurisdiction’s interest is advanced without detriment to another jurisdiction’s interest

        • in four cases one jurisdiction’s interest is advanced to the detriment of another jurisdiction’s interest

          • indeed, two go one way (domestic law applies) and two go the other way (foreign law applies) although the interests of the respective jurisdictions are exactly the same in both cases

      • the most forceful affirmative defense for the traditional rule—uniformity of result—hardly seems to merit these perverse results; moreover, the traditional rule is further weakened if one acknowledges that it does not actually achieve uniformity (due to difficulties of characterization; competing rules—eg. place of performance; determining place of making; second line defenses (escape techniques)—eg. public policy

    • Currie, Notes on Methods and Objectives in the Conflict of Laws

      • suggested analysis

        • 1. default = law of forum

        • 2. when foreign law is requested, the court should:

          • a. determine governmental policy expressed in forum law

            • restraint and enlightenment in determination of state policy: courts may determine that state policy does not require rigid application of statutory requirements; instead, it might find that the precise limits established by another state are applicable so long as that state is pursuing the same general policy (eg. might allow slightly higher interest rates on small loans than would be permissible in the purely domestic context, if the other state also limits such interest rates but ahs chosen a slightly higher rate as the maximum allowable interest rate)

          • b. determine whether the facts of the case provide legitimate basis for asserting an interest in applying that policy

            • rational altruism: state might find that it has an interest in extending a policy (eg. placing upon local industry all social costs of the enterprise) regardless of the domicile of the injured party

        • 3. if necessary, similarly determine policy and potential interest of foreign state

        • 4. apply foreign law only if: forum has no interest; foreign state has interest

        • 5. apply forum law: whenever the forum has an interest (regardless of potential foreign interest); and when neither has an interest(???)

    • Twerski, Enlightened Territorialism and Professor Cavers—the Pennsylvania Method

      • territorialist approach

      • “[A]s the ‘time and space’ aspects of the case become more related to the state of injury, it becomes more ‘their’ business in that the human reaction to the case becomes more vital.”

        • this is due, in part, to the educational function of law: if an event occurs in a state, the state does not lose the right to make a statement about the policies (and the values that motivate those policies) behind its law simply because a particular case involves individuals who are not from that state

    • Sedler, The Territorial Impact: Automobile Accidents and the Significance of a State Line

      • existential-legal component of Cipolla:

        • expectation that territorial law will apply is not a always persuasive argument: “in functional, socio-economic and mobility terms, people do not live in or identify with a state so much as they do a particular area, which, depending on geography, may be wholly within a particular state, or may cut across state lines”

        • in Cipolla, the real defendant was a Pennsylvania corporation (i.e. the insurance company); the individual defendant, who was a Delaware domiciliary, was only the nominal defendant

          • if a host-guest statute is meant to protect hosts from ungrateful guests, the host should be able to decide whether her insurance company should be able to avoid its contractual obligation to cover her liability

        • to say that application of territorial law is the “price of federalism” is to determine that this is a price we are willing to pay; there is no need to pay that price unless we attach independent legal significance to the existence of state lines

      • in true conflict cases, “the forum may apply its own law on the ground that the plaintiff is a resident of that state where:

        • (1) the fact of residency gives it an interest in applying its law on the issue as to which a conflict exists, and

        • (2) the application of its law does not produce fundamental unfairness or defeat the legitimate expectations of the other party.”

      • application of this principle to the “hitchhiker hypothetical”

      • views tort law as loss allocating rather than conduct influencing

    • Cavers, The Choice-of-Law Process

      • seven principles to be applied in cases presenting true conflicts

        • “(1) Where the liability laws of the state of injury set a higher standard of conduct or of financial protection against injury than do the laws of the state where the person causing the injury has acted or had his home, the laws of the state of injury should determine the standard and the protection applicable to the case, at least where the person injured was not so related to the person causing the injury that the question should be relegated to the law governing their relationship.”

        • “(2) Where the liability laws of the state in which the defendant acted and caused injury set a lower standard of conduct or of financial protection than of the laws of the home state of the person suffering the injury, the laws of the state of conduct and injury should determine the standard of conduct of protection applicable to the case, at least where the person injured was not so related to the person causing the injury that the question should be relegated to the law governing their relationship.”

        • “(3) Where the state in which the defendant acted has established special controls, including the sanction of civil liability, over conduct of the kind in which the defendant was engaged when he caused a foreseeable injury to the plaintiff in another state, the plaintiff, though having no relationship to the defendant, should be accorded the benefit of the special standards of conduct and of financial protection in the state of the defendant’s conduct, even though the state of injury had imposed no such controls or sanctions.”

        • “(4) Where the law of the state in which a relationship has its seat has imposed a standard of conduct or financial protection on one party to that relationship for the benefit of the other party which is higher than the like standard imposed by the state of injury, the law of the former state should determine the standard of conduct or of financial protection applicable to the case for the benefit of the party protected by that state’s law.”

        • “(5) Where the law of the state in which a relationship has its seat has imposed a standard of conduct or financial protection on one party to that relationship for the benefit of the other party which is lower than the like standard imposed by the state of injury, the law of the former state should determine the standard of conduct or of financial protection applicable to the case for the benefit of the party whose liability that state’s law would deny or limit.”

        • “(6) Where, for purpose of providing protection from the adverse consequences of incompetence, heedlessness, ignorance, or unequal bargaining power, the law of a state has imposed restrictions on the power to contract or to convey or encumber property, its protective provisions should be applied against a party to the restricted transaction where (a) the person protected has a home in the state (if the law’s purpose were to protect the person) and (b) the affected transaction or protected property interest were centered there or, (c) if it were not, this was due to facts that were fortuitous or had been manipulated to evade the protective law.”

        • “(7) If the express (or reasonably foreseeable) intention of the parties to a transaction involving two or more states is that the law of a particular state which is reasonably related to the transaction should be applied to it, the law of that state should be applied if it allows the transaction to be carried out, even though neither party has a home in the state and the transaction is not centered there. However, this principle does not apply if the transaction runs counter to any protective law that the preceding principle would render applicable or if the transaction includes a conveyance of land and the mode of conveyance or the interest created run counter to applicable mandatory rules of the situs of the land. This principle does not govern the legal effect of the transaction on third parties with independent interests.”

    • Weintraub, The Future of Choice of Law for Torts: What Principles Should Be Preferred

      • perception of fairness in choice of law: “Reasonable contacts between the plaintiff’s state and the defendant, or at least the defendant’s ability to foresee that in many, not just extraordinary, cases his conduct will have an effect in the plaintiff’s state…are probably necessary before the defendant will perceive his treatment under plaintiff’s law as fair.”

      • however, “recovery … represents the most pervasive aspect of tort developments in this country over the past several decades”

      • proposed choice of law rules in tort:

        • “(1) ‘False conflict’ case: If, in the light of its contacts with the parties or the transaction, only one state will have the policies underlying its tort rule advanced, apply the law of that state.

        • “(2) ‘True conflict’ cases: If two or more states having contacts with the aprties or the transaction will have the policies underlying their different tort rules advanced, apply the law that will favor the plaintiff unless one or both of the following factors is present:

          • “(a) That law is anachronistic.

          • “(b) The state with that law does not have sufficient contact with the defendant or the defendant’s actual or intended course of conduct to make application of its law reasonable.

        • “(3) ‘No interest’ cases: If none of the states having contacts with the parties or the transaction will have the policies underlying its tort rule advanced, apply the law that will favor the plaintiff unless one or both of the following factors is present:

          • “(a) That law is anachronistic.

          • “(b) The state with that law does not have sufficient contact with the defendant or the defendant’s actual or intended course of conduct to make application of its law reasonable.

    • Baxter, Choice of Law and the Federal System

      • in true conflict cases involving tort law should be resolved by measuring the extent to which the purpose underlying a rule will be furthered by application or impaired by non-application to the case; where one of the asserted applicable rules is more pertinent to the case than the competing rule, that rule should govern

        • borderline cases may present difficulties, but judges should simply do the best they can

        • this is better than allowing forum shopping (as Currie would do)

      • general rule: in real conflict cases, the law whose objective is internal rather than external (i.e. completely within the state—rather than involving persons outside of the state to whom the has a responsibility for legal ordering) should prevail

        • moreover, where the conflicting rules are both external, the external objective of the state whose internal objective will be least impaired by subordination of external objective should be subordinated

        • LS: comparative impairment

          • tries to balance impairment

      • in consensual transactions, the importance of predictability requires that the choice of law rule be based on the situation as it appears to the parties at the time of transaction (not on the actual identification of the parties with a particular state)

        • protected classes: choice of law rule should be based on the other party’s knowledge of the protected party’s residence and of other characteristics of membership in the protected class

        • property cases:

          • situs: situs rule should control where the intended beneficiaries of the law are the persons who live in the vicinity of the property (eg. nuisance law)

          • ownership claims

            • intestate succession, validity of wills: should be governed by the law of the state with the greatest interest in the intrafamilial distribution

            • where the terms of a will executed in state X by domiciliary of X violates the rule against perpetuities of the state in which the property is located, the situs rule should generally apply

    • Leflar, Choice Influenicng Considerations in Conflict of Law

      • five considerations in crafting choice of law rules:

        • predictability of results (i.e. prevent forum shopping)

        • maintenance of interstate and international order

        • simplification of the judicial task

        • advancement of the forum’s governmental interests

        • application of the better rule of law

    • Von Mehren, Choice of Law and the Problem of Justice

      • split the difference—i.e., where laws conflict re. recovery, do something in between

      • hasn’t been taken up by any courts


    5. The Latter New York Cases

    • in applying Neumeier Rules outside of tort contexts other than host/guest it is necessary to distinguish between loss allocating rules and conduct regulating rules

      • loss allocating rules evince an interest in protecting a state’s domiciliaries

        • thus, the state has an interest in seeing these laws applied whenever they would allow a domiciliary of that state to recover (i.e. they follow domiciliaries beyond the state’s borders, but do not apply to non-domiciliaries even within the state)

      • conduct regulating rules evince an interest in regulating behavior of all who enter the state

        • thus, the state has an interest in these rules being applied to conduct within the state whether engaged in by domiciliary or non-domiciliary; but state has no interest in application of its rule to conduct outside the state

    • Schultz v. Boy Scouts, NY 1985—205

      • facts:

        • πs’ sons were sexually abused by ∆s’ employee at camp in NY; this led one of the sons to commit suicide in NJ; πs alcim that ∆s’ negligently hired this employee; sued for (a) psychological, physical, and injuries to sons; (b) psychological injuries to ∆s; (c) wrongful death of son

        • πs and sons are NJ domiciliaries; ∆1 is NJ charitable corporation; ∆2 is Ohio charitable corporation; ∆2 operated school in NJ that πs’ sons attended

      • conflicting laws

        • NJ: charitable immunity including negligent hiring and firing

        • Ohio: charitable immunity but doesn’t cover negligent hiring and firing

        • NY: no charitable immunity

      • claims (b) and (c)

        • injuries in NJ; conduct occurred in NY

        • held: NY’s interests are insufficient to warrant application of NY law

      • claim (a) as to ∆1 (NJ domiciliary)

        • court finds the rule in conflict is loss-allocating

          • court that NY might be said to have an interest in (a) preventing child abuse in the state regardless of where the injured party is domiciled and perhaps in (b)

        • held: common-domicile rule should apply

          • this is application of Neumeier Rule 1

      • claim (a) as to ∆2 (Ohio domiciliary)

        • Neumeier Rule 3 + interest analysis

        • domiciliaries should accept the burdens and benefits of their state’s loss-allocating rules

        • application of NJ law will further the parties’ expectations that law of the jurisdiction where ∆ sends its employees and where πs are domiciled would apply

        • NJ also has an interest in protecting charities who act in NJ b/c they want to attract charitable activities to NJ

      • court also rejects πs’ claim that application of NJ law would violate NY public policy

        • there are not enough contacts with NY to implicate NY’s public policy

    • Cooney v. Osgood, NY 1993—225

      • Neumeier Rule 2

    • Barkanic v. Gen. Admin. of Civil Aviation (China), 2d Cir.—handout

    • Pescatore v. Pan American World Airways, Inc., 2d Cir 1996—handout


    6. The Impact of Insurance


    B. Interest Analysis in Contracts—Interests or Contacts



    • Restatement Second § 188: law to be applied in the absence of effective choice of law

      • (1) the rights and duties of parties with respect ot an issue in contact are determined by the substantive law of the state that, as to that issue, has the most significant relationship to the transaction and the parties

      • (2) contacts to be taken into account include: place of contracting; place of negotiation; place of performance; location of the subject matter of the contract; domicile, residence, nationality, place of incorporation and place of business of parties

      • NOTE: in certain cases, eg. life insurance, chattel, R.2d provides presumptive rules, but even these can be argued out of

    • Auten v. Auten, NY 1954—246

      • husband leaves wife in England; she comes to NY seeking settlement; they enter into a contract (signed in NY) whereby husband provides monthly stipend for child support and maintenance; amounts to be paid by trustee (in NY) to wife (in England)

      • held: English law applies

        • court decided that place of performance governed

          • money is transferred to England

          • but wife is also supposed not to sue—and her alleged breach occurred when she sued in England

        • court analyzes contacts, but with a hint of interest analysis

          • seem to make the English contacts weightier, more significant

          • NY contacts are mainly the result of π’s actions (i.e. his wife had no choice but to come to NY to enter into this contract, etc.)

    • Haag v. Barnes, NY 1961—249

      • child born out of wedlock as result of affair in NY; child born in Chicago; after π came to NY in attempt to see ∆, she returned to Chicago and the parties entered into an agreement in which ∆ was to provide for π’s child but would not admit parentage; agreement explicitly stated that it was to be governed by Illinois law; ∆ paid sums in excess of the agreement; however, π, having returned to NY, sought increases in payments

      • held: NY action is precluded by Illinois law governing contract

        • since agreement was valid in Illinois (as it provided for payments of more than $800), suit is barred in NY even though NY requires that any agreement for child support must be court approved (which this agreement was not)

        • place of contract and intention of parties to have Illinois govern must be given heavy weight when determining which state has most significant contacts

        • moreover, child was born in NY; most agents for making and receiving payment are in Illinois; payments have always been made in Chicago

        • the fact that mother and child are now living in NY weigh less strongly than the other factors

    • statute of frauds

      • finder’s fee cases

        • conflicting laws

          • NY: does not recognize oral contracts for finder’s fee

          • NJ & Ma: no such limitation

        • Daystrom, NY 1969—254

          • facts: NY finder introduced D (NJ corp.) to R (French corp.) w/ written agreement for commission if D acquired R; in the end, R was acquired by S, then S acquired D; finder claimed oral agreement w/ D to extend earlier arrangement to negotiations with S

          • held: NY law applies

            • it is clear that NY has the paramount interest in the application of its law when the contacts New York and New Jersey have with the controversy are examined in relation to the policies and purposes to be vindicated by the conflicting laws

            • NY’s interest in protecting principles extends to foreign corporations b/c NY wants to protect those who take advantage of NY’s position as an international market place

        • Raytheon, Ma 1985—254

          • facts: NY finder suggest that ∆ (incorporated in Mass.) acquire company B; claims that ∆ agreed to pay finder’s fee if it did so; nothing came of the deal, but, five years later, ∆ acquired B through different intermediaries; NY finder sued

          • held: Mass law applies

            • contacts themselves point neither to NY or Mass (there are contacts with both)

            • relative interests of NY and Mass also do not point to either state

            • thus, court determines that it should apply the law that would validate the contract (if it existed)

      • Bernkrant v. Fowler, Cal 1961—239

        • facts: πs (Nev. domiciliaries) purchased land in Nev. from ∆’s testator; later refinanced their loans in order to pay ∆ portion of amount due on property; πs claim that in exchange, testator orally agreed that any remaining debt on the property would be forgiven upon his death; testator died in California and πs filed action to cancel remaining debt and recover sums paid after testator’s death; unclear where testator was domiciled at time of contract

        • relevant laws:

          • Cal: agreement not to be performed during promisor’s lifetime must be reduced to writing

          • Nev.: although court says there is no case on point, it believes that Nev. would apply common law rule—i.e., obligation to pay money secured by interest in real property is not real property; thus, not subject to statute of frauds

        • held: Nev. law applies

          • if testator was domiciled in Nev., Cal. law obviously does not apply b/c Cal. had no contacts with agreement at the time it was made

          • even if testator was domiciled in Cal., Cal. would have had no interest in applying its statute of frauds unless testator died in Cal.; because πs could not have known whre testator would die, they should be allowed to rely on the laws of their own place of domicile (as it was also the place of contract and place of performance)

    • capacity to contract

      • Lilienthal v. Kaufman, Or 1964—232

        • facts

          • ∆ is from Oregon; π from California

          • contract (loan) entered into in California

          • ∆ defaults; π tries to recover; but ∆ has been declared a spendthrift in Oregon

        • analysis

          • interests / public policy

            • both states have an interest:

              • Oregon wants to protect its spendthrift

              • California wants to protect its creditor

            • so we’ll fall back on Oregon policy

          • substance v. procedure

          • NOTE: R.2d has presumptive rule for repayment of debt: where debt is to be paid (in this case Cali)

            • but can get out of it another state has more significant contacts

    • scholarly approaches

      • Baxter: comparative impairment

        • depends whether lender knew or should have known about protective policy and fact that ∆ fell within that category

          • has the state that protects ∆ made info. available

            • if so, more likely that out-of-state lenders will (if they are able) take advantage of this situation—thus, knowledge would lead to greater impairment of protective policy

          • if, on the other hand, the debtor seeks out the out-pf-state lender and that lender has no knowledge of protected status, then policy in favor of enforcing contracts (e.g. Cali policy) is more likely to be impaired (or impairment is going to be greater)

        • less a formal rule that

        • NOTE: adopted in California

      • Cavers: Principle 6

        • protective principles should be applied in favor of one with home in state if contract is centered in that state or, if not, if it was centered in another state in an explicit attempt to get around the protective principle (“manipulative contacts”)

    • Rome Convention—sup44

      • Art. 4(1): general principle: if no law is chosen, “contract shall be governed by the law of the country with which it is most closely connected.”

      • 4(2): refers to “characteristic performance”—contract is governed by law of place of habitual residence or central administration of whomever is to effect such performance

        • but see 4(5): Art. 4(2) is not applied if characteristic performance cannot be determined

      • Art. 1(2)(a): status or legal capacity are, for the most part, not addressed by this Convention

      • Art. 7: provides exception for mandatory rules of the forum—but, it is very hard to determine what’s mandatory

        • basic idea: rules that cannot be deviated from

        • in US, tends to mean rules about which parties cannot contract

        • differs from ordre publique—public policy of the forum

          • can be invoked to use forum law

          • in contrast, mandatory rules refer to the laws of another state

      • Art. 11: incapacity

        • contract concluded btw. persons in the same country, person with capacity under that law can only invoke incapacity under another law if the other party was aware or should have been aware of this incapacity

    C. Choice Directed Solutions



    1. Party Autonomy in Contracts: Choice of Law

    • UK has always been quite sympathetic to choice of law clauses—especially those that select English law

      • require only reasonableness; no connection

      • choice of English law was almost by definition reasonable (highly developed commercial law providing increased legal certainty)

    • US used to argue that parties shouldn’t be allowed to perform a “legislative act”; however, those who argue that choice of law is not a legislative act have won out

      • Siegelman v. Cunard White Star, 2d Cir 1955—259: contract on ticket for ocean voyage stated that all questions on this contract shall be governed by English law

        • despite broad wording (“on this contract” is a bit unclear), NY court applied English choice of law for tort suffered onboard ship because no mandatory rule of NY law was offended

        • also, “English law” may refer to conflicts rules as well as local/internal law of England—but court applies default rule—internal law only

    • another position in choice of law: choose the law that upholds the contract (assume that parties meant it to be valid)—perhaps even against choice of law

    • R.2d § 187: choice of law by parties

      • (1) choice of law is always valid when issue is one that could have been resolved contractually

        • this section is primarily about interpretation (and gap-filling??)

      • (2) it is also valid for issues that could not have been resolved contractually unless:

        • (a) state has no substantial relationship to parties and the transaction and there is no other reasonable basis for the choice (perhaps certainty, predictability of outcome provided by developed body of commercial law fits within this second part)

        • (b) application of chosen law would be contrary to fundamental policy of a state which has a materially greater interest in determination of the particular issue and the law of that other state would otherwise apply under § 188 (i.e., in the absence of effective choice of law)

          • NOTE: this isn’t analogous to the public policy exception

      • presumptive rules

        • service contracts: contract for services is centered in the state where the services are rendered

          • Southern Int’l Sales v. Potter & Brumfield Div., SDNY 1976—272: applied Puerto Rico law (forbidding at-will termination of contracts with Puerto Rican dealers) despite Indiana choice of law (Indiana allows at-will termination)

            • interest analysis

              • Puerto Rico obviously wants to protect its dealers

                • seems to think that dealers will be in weaker negotiating position;

                • since this may extend not only to termination clause but also to choice of law clause, PR certainly wants

              • Indiana, however, also has an interest in upholding contracts and protecting its manufacturers

    • Uniform Commercial Code § 1-301

      • (a) distinguishes btw. domestic and international transactions

      • (b)

        • (1) domestic transactions: parties can select the law of any state (no reasonable relationship requirement)

        • (2) international transaction: parties can select the law of any state or nation (no reasonable relationship requirement)

      • (c) in case of no effective choice of law provision, forum state’s choice of law rules applies

      • (d) special rules for consumer transactions

      • (e) exception if application of law of designated state would be contrary to a fundamental policy of the state whose law would otherwise apply

    • relationship between choice of forum and choice of law

      • England

        • when English forum is selected, English courts assume selection of English law was also intended (see Tzortzis—279)

          • moreover, choice of English law gives English courts jurisdiction regardless of other factors

        • however, where all contacts are with the law of another country, that law may be applied (Tunisienne—282)

      • in US, choice of forum is less likely to be conflated with choice of law

        • there are good reasons for selecting forum independent of any choice of law

    • New York Law on Choice of Law and Choice of Forum Clauses—sup57
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